The jointly-run Kaesong industrial zone was shut in April amid high cross-border tensions. Seoul and Pyongyang agreed last month to reopen the park, but relations have since soured again.
The North's announcement of a new international deal came after South Korea said Monday it had postponed a planned investment road show aimed at drumming up foreign interest in Kaesong.
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Pyongyang's Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) said the North had reached an agreement on building a "high-tech development district" in Kaesong with a consortium of East Asian and Middle Eastern companies including Singapore's Jurong Consultants and OKP Holdings, and Hong Kong's P&T Architects & Engineers Ltd.
"They will soon enter the implementation phase of the project", it said, adding that the consortium also agreed to enter a joint venture with the North to build a highway linking Pyongyang's airport to the city.
South Korea's Unification Ministry spokesman said it had no official comment, but stressed the project had "nothing to do with the existing Kaesong zone".
The firms named by KCNA were also tight-lipped about their participation.
OKP Holdings said its involvement was "in the preliminary stages", while Jurong and P&T both declined to comment.
The North's official newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, said the isolated communist state yesterday wrapped up a two-day international forum in Pyongyang -- with experts from the United States, China, Canada, India and elsewhere -- on developing special economic zones nationwide.
Professor Yang Moo-Jin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said Pyongyang was looking to pressure South Korea into making greater high-tech investments in the North.
North Korea effectively shut down Kaesong, which lies 10 kilometres (six miles) on its side of the border, when it withdrew its 53,000 workers from the complex in April.
As military tensions eased, Seoul and Pyongyang agreed last month to reopen the industrial park, but relations have since soured again, with the North railing against what it sees as the South's "hostility".
South Korea has been pressing for foreign investment in Kaesong, believing the presence of overseas firms would make it harder for Pyongyang to shut down the complex in the future.
But many experts question who would be attracted by a project run by two countries that are still technically at war.
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